… Earlier this week, the UK’s Labour party even said that it is closely looking at UBI as an idea, with shadow chancellor John McDonnell saying it might be an idea whose time has come.

More and more cities are rolling out experiments with a basic income, with Utrecht in the Netherlands experimenting, Finland planning a study next year, and, despite the rejection of a nationwide UBI scheme, the Swiss city of
Lausanne could also give the idea a go … //

… The most important obstacle for basic income is a moral obstacle. It is in the ideas that we still have about work. We still work with a very outdated definition of what work is. We define work by getting a salary in a hierarchical relationship with an employer, and you have to get paid.

“All the other things, caring for the children, caring for the elderly, doing housework and volunteer work — we don’t consider that as work, even though obviously it is. Try and stop doing those things, go on strike as a careworker or stop doing the dishes, and you’ll see that it is going to be a problem.”

The fear that UBI will disincentivise work — that we’ll all stay home watching TV instead of working if we get free money — turns out to be empirically unfounded. Pilot studies of UBI schemes have shown that given the choice to work or not, people still go out to work, but they often change the work they choose to do. Net labour productivity goes up under UBI, proving that the economic impact of UBI is positive not negative to growth … //

on en.wikipedia: Minsky Moment is a sudden major collapse of asset values which is part of the credit cycle or business cycle. Such moments occur because long periods of prosperity and increasing value of investments lead to increasing speculation using borrowed money …;